The content of this blog presumes you are already familiar with Denver Snuffer's books. Careful explanations given in the books lay the foundation for what is contained here. If you read this blog without having first read his books, then you assume responsibility for your own misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the writer's intent. Please do not presume to judge Mr. Snuffer's intentions if you have not first read his books.

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Sunday, March 7, 2010

With respect to the leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

I balance my deep respect for these men, and profound awareness that no-one is really equal to the burden which WE impose upon them, with the knowledge that I alone am responsible for confirming through revelation all truth. Now, I say "the burden which WE impose upon them" to distinguish between what the Lord and scriptures says are their duties on the one hand, and the mythological duties which we have put upon them. The scriptures and the Lord do NOT make them omniscient. As a group the Saints do. That is the first great error, and it is not the leader's error but the saints'.

I've seen many, many mistakes made by the Brethren. But I loved them and sustained them and have refrained from being overtly critical of them.

It is not an institution which will be saved. Indeed, the institution is doomed to be confined to this world, and not pass into the next. But, it is the individual who will be saved. Individuals, however, must receive what the institution offers to obtain salvation. Therefore respect for the church is necessary. It's role is essential. It's authority from the Lord.

2 comments:

Though the people, and the official hierarchy of the formerly “true” church maintained their belief in their chosen status, the Lord nevertheless had a different idea of whose church was His. The people were following Noah's lead, assuming the church he was leading was the Lord's church, but the Lord sends an astounding statement in Mosiah 27:13. At this point Alma the Younger was railing against his father's upstart church, the renegade "apostate" religion which was an offshoot of the official, "recognized" church. Alma the Younger was risking his own personal salvation doing his personal preachings, but likely did so because he, too, was convinced that Noah's church was the "true" one and his father’s an “apostate.” This verse reads, "Nevertheless [the angel] cried again, saying: Alma, arise … for why persecutest thou the church of God? For the Lord hath said: This is my church, and I will establish it; and nothing shall overthrow it, save it is the transgression of my people."

So, very long story cut very short, Alma the Younger learns his father's upstart religion was Christ's church, the “church of God.” It had the recognized, by heaven, authority. Though we have no official declaration of when it happened, this angel confirms what we already knew in reading the account in Mosiah. What we typically gloss over, though, is that somehow Noah's church had lost that authority years before. We're not told when, how, or what the straw was that broke the back of the spiritually thirsty camel, but this account makes it official. The renegade, offshoot, “apostate” religion was the “church of God,” while the church that everyone viewed as the “official,” recognized hierarchy was merely a shell, an impostor.

So my question is: at what point does the authority become lost? At what point is it removed? At what point does another church, likely viewed as an "apostate" religion by the main body of the formerly "true" church, receive that authority to be "Christ's"? Though we, today, have that recognized status from decades previous when the authority was present, here we have a stark example in the scriptures of a “true” church losing its status and authority to administer. Where there is a lack of a connection with heaven, the power to administer the ordinances thereof is missing. It was this renegade, apostate religion of Alma the Elder’s which had that power, while the official, recognized institution lacked it.

Perhaps, though, I’m wrong in the above assessments. If that’s the case, I welcome the correction and would implore it, given the nature of the discussion.

At what point does a church lose "authority," per se? Authority as recognized by heaven, and not man. Though the “message” is what carries the ultimate authority, nevertheless we’re told that the Church maintains authority to administer the ordinances. But, at what point do the teachings and authority become so degenerate that it’s no longer recognized in heaven.

For example, there's a compelling story in Mosiah between Zeniff, King Noah, Alma, and Alma the Younger. Clearly, the story is much longer than I could relate here, but I will attempt to make it brief.

Suffice it to say, and I'd be interested in your thoughts, Zeniff was a "prophet" (especially in today's terms), leading the then "true" Church. Though he was a great, righteous leader, he yet lacked one thing, it would seem. That one thing would appear to be discernment. Discernment because of his dealings with the Lamanites, but most importantly with his selection of King Noah as his replacement. Of all the people he could have called to fill his position as the presiding High Priest, he calls Noah (now King Noah), one of the most wicked people in the BoM. Noah then replaces his father’s priests with his buddies, calling his friends to the key church callings. By doing this, he knew he’d have the support to do what he wanted to. The church under Noah's reign transitions from one of spiritual guidance and growth to one of physical growth; physical manifestations to blind the eyes of the members as to the veracity and prosperity of the church. Temples were built, flat taxes/tithings were levied, and Noah and his priests lived lavishly on the proceeds. As Denver mentioned in one of his books, the high priests convinced Noah that all was well, that things were good because they were "prospering.” To them, physical prosperity was a sign that they were the “authorized” spiritual body of the “true” church.

Then Abinadi comes, preaches, and leaves for 2 years. He returns, at which point Alma had become convinced of what Abinadi had said. Alma's conscience gets the better of him and he's forced to flee and establishes his own church, knowing how far the “official” religion had strayed from the original teachings and the truth.

The majority of the people at this time fully believed that Noah's leadership and organization was the "true" church, convinced of their “chosen” status. It had the established hierarchy, history, and faithful stories from the past. It had the structure, the high priests, the temples, buildings, and all the physical proof of the “true” church. The people, and the leadership, had both become blinded by prosperity and temporal proof as a replacement for spiritual manifestations, though angels no longer visited this “true” church.